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PROGRESS IN THE STUDY OF CANINE DISTEMPER

JAMA. 1929;92(2):149-150. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02700280053019.
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Some years ago an intensive study of distemper was started under the auspices of the Medical Research Council and the English periodical Field, representing owners of dogs. A report on results of this work has been published by Dr. P. P. Laidlaw and Mr. G. W. Dunkin1 which is certain to receive much consideration.

The earlier workers on distemper labored under the disadvantage of not knowing whether dogs selected for experimental inoculations were immune from having had the disease and also in not being able with certainty to prevent incidental infection with distemper during the course of their experiments. It hardly needs to be stated that distemper is a highly infectious and widely spread disease; in view of this fact, however, the first objective in the plans of the English workers was to breed dogs under such conditions that all contact with distemper would be excluded. This was accomplished

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